Xiaomi Repair Cost UK 2026 — Complete Price Guide
Direct answer: Xiaomi screen replacement in the UK runs from around £49.95 for the budget Redmi A-series up to £549.95 for a Mix Fold 4 foldable, with Xiaomi flagships between £199.95 and £349.95 and the best-selling Redmi Note line between £89.95 and £149.95. We cover Xiaomi, Redmi and Poco under one roof. Every price below is published up front; there is no quote form, and screens and batteries carry a 27-month guarantee.
Xiaomi — alongside its Redmi and Poco sub-brands — is one of the largest phone families in the UK, bought overwhelmingly online, which makes mail-in the natural repair route. Yet most UK repair sites lump "Xiaomi" into a quote form and never publish a figure. This hub does the opposite: real, model-level prices for the Xiaomi flagship range, the Redmi Note volume line, the budget Redmi A/C series and the Poco performance line, all drawn from our live price list. Whether it is a cracked Xiaomi 14, a fading Redmi Note 13 battery or a Poco F6 screen, you will find the price here before you book. See also how Xiaomi compares with Nothing, OnePlus, Pixel and Motorola.
Xiaomi / Redmi / Poco repair prices 2026
Prices are fitted, by post, including parts, labour and insured return. Screens, batteries, cameras and back glass carry 27 months; charging-port and connector repairs carry the 9-month connector tier.
Xiaomi flagship range
| Model | Screen | Battery | Charging port |
|---|---|---|---|
| Xiaomi 14 Ultra | £349.95 | £84.95 | £74.95 |
| Xiaomi 14 Pro | £299.95 | £79.95 | £69.95 |
| Xiaomi 14 | £269.95 | £74.95 | £64.95 |
| Xiaomi 13 Ultra | £329.95 | £79.95 | £69.95 |
| Xiaomi 13 / 13 Pro | £229.95–£279.95 | £69.95–£74.95 | £59.95–£64.95 |
| Xiaomi 12 / 12 Pro | £199.95–£249.95 | £64.95–£69.95 | £54.95–£59.95 |
Redmi Note & Redmi volume line
| Model | Screen | Battery | Charging port |
|---|---|---|---|
| Redmi Note 14 Pro+ / Pro | £129.95–£149.95 | £49.95–£54.95 | £39.95–£44.95 |
| Redmi Note 14 | £109.95 | £44.95 | £34.95 |
| Redmi Note 13 Pro+ / Pro | £119.95–£139.95 | £44.95–£49.95 | £34.95–£39.95 |
| Redmi Note 13 | £99.95 | £39.95 | £29.95 |
| Redmi Note 12 / 12 Pro | £89.95–£109.95 | £34.95–£39.95 | £24.95–£29.95 |
| Redmi 14C / 13C / 13 | £64.95–£74.95 | £34.95 | £24.95 |
Poco performance line
| Model | Screen | Battery | Charging port |
|---|---|---|---|
| Poco F6 Pro / F6 | £159.95–£189.95 | £59.95–£64.95 | £49.95–£54.95 |
| Poco X6 Pro / X6 | £129.95–£149.95 | £54.95–£59.95 | £44.95–£49.95 |
Xiaomi Mix foldables
| Model | Inner screen | Battery |
|---|---|---|
| Mix Fold 4 | £549.95 | £99.95 |
| Mix Fold 3 | £499.95 | £94.95 |
| Mix Flip | £399.95 | £89.95 |
Diagnostics are free on standard repairs and £24.95 on board-level work, deducted if you proceed. For the dedicated Redmi Note breakdown, see our Redmi Note screen replacement page; for the wider screen picture, our Xiaomi screen replacement spoke. If your model is not listed, contact us for a quote — we cover around 2,467 device models.
What affects Xiaomi repair costs?
- Panel type. Xiaomi flagships use large, high-spec AMOLED panels that cost markedly more than the LCD / mid-tier AMOLED on Redmi A and C models — the biggest single driver.
- Sub-brand positioning. Redmi is the volume value line and Poco the performance-for-price line; both use sensibly priced parts, which is why their screen prices sit well below the Xiaomi flagship range.
- Foldable complexity. The Mix Fold and Mix Flip use flexible inner displays that demand specialist bench work, hence the higher tier.
Genuine vs OEM-grade vs aftermarket
We fit OEM-grade panels and cells that match the original specification for colour, brightness, touch and run-time, and we tell you exactly what is going into your phone before any work starts. Aftermarket copies are cheaper but routinely dim the AMOLED and shift colour. See our parts-grade guide.
All Xiaomi repairs — what we fix
- Screen replacement across Xiaomi, Redmi and Poco.
- Battery replacement — including the large-battery Redmi models.
- Charging port repair — common on budget Redmi USB-C ports (9-month connector tier).
- Back glass & rear camera replacement.
- Common Xiaomi & Redmi faults — MIUI/HyperOS software vs hardware.
How celltech's Xiaomi mail-in repair works
celltech is a UK-wide mail-in specialist. Book at /repair/phone/xiaomi, post your handset tracked and insured via Royal Mail Special Delivery, we diagnose free and confirm the exact price, fit the OEM-grade part, test, and return it tracked and insured. Full detail in our Xiaomi & Redmi repair by post guide and the UK mail-in guide.
If posting a Mix Fold or Mix Flip, pad it so it cannot fold or shift, protecting the inner display and hinge.
Is it worth repairing a Xiaomi, Redmi or Poco?
Almost always — and especially on the Redmi Note line, where a £89.95–£149.95 screen or a £34.95–£54.95 battery is a fraction of a replacement. The Xiaomi flagships and Mix foldables hold enough value that a screen or battery repair still beats replacement, underwritten by the 27-month guarantee. The exception is a handset with cascading board or liquid damage, which we diagnose free and weigh honestly against the beyond-economical-repair threshold. For the broader market, see our Android screen replacement guide.
What the most common Xiaomi repairs involve
The price list above is more useful when you know what sits behind each line. The three jobs we see most across the Xiaomi family — screen, battery and charging port — each follow a recognisable bench path, and the differences between them explain both the cost and the guarantee tier.
Screen replacement — split by panel type
A Xiaomi-family screen replacement starts the same way regardless of sub-brand: the handset is warmed on a controlled heated platen to soften the factory perimeter adhesive, and the display assembly is separated with precision picks. From there the technique diverges. A budget Redmi A or C model with an LCD panel carries a layered glass-digitiser-LCD-backlight stack that lifts as one unit. A flagship Xiaomi 14 or a Poco F-series uses a bonded AMOLED assembly that is thinner and more fragile, with the OLED layer directly under the cover lens, so the picks work the edges inward to protect the flex ribbons. The replacement OEM-grade panel is laminated back on fresh optically clear adhesive, and on flagships the optical in-display fingerprint sensor is re-paired and re-calibrated to the new panel. The full screen process lives on our Xiaomi screen replacement spoke.
Battery replacement — and the large-cell Redmi note
Battery work means opening the rear — either a plastic back that levers away or, on the Xiaomi 13/14 Pro, a glass back bonded to the frame that must be warmed and lifted with care because it shatters easily. The old cell is disconnected and lifted, and an OEM-grade cell of matching capacity is fitted. The detail worth knowing is that the Redmi Note line carries large-capacity cells; those packs are under more thermal stress from fast charging, which is part of why they degrade faster and come in for replacement more often. The technique matters because excessive force on a large, fatigued cell risks puncture — we heat the adhesive and lift evenly rather than prying. Detail on our Xiaomi battery replacement page, and on how fast charging affects cell life in our fast charging safety guide.
Charging port repair — the daughter-board route
Most Xiaomi, Redmi and Poco models mount the USB-C socket on a daughter-board rather than soldering the port straight to the main board. That is good news for repair economics: the standard fix is to replace that daughter-board assembly, which is cleaner and more reliable than micro-soldering a port in place. It is also why the charging-port tier carries the 9-month connector guarantee rather than the 27 months a screen or battery earns. See our Xiaomi charging port repair page for the diagnosis-first approach (cable and debris are responsible for a surprising share of reported "port" faults).
How Xiaomi repair economics compare across Android
Because the Xiaomi family stretches from a budget Redmi A to a Mix Fold 4 foldable, it spans almost the entire Android price ladder in one brand. Placing it next to the other Android families we repair by post makes the value picture clearer.
- Nothing. Nothing Phone is a single flagship-tier line with a Glyph interface on the back, so there is no budget tier pulling the floor down — Nothing sits at the upper-middle of the range. See our Nothing Phone repair cost hub.
- OnePlus. OnePlus mirrors Xiaomi's ladder — curved Fluid AMOLED flagships down to Nord mid-range — so its repair economics feel familiar, with SuperVOOC fast-charging adding its own port-wear pattern. Compare on our OnePlus repair cost hub.
- Google Pixel. Pixel focuses on a smaller flagship-and-A-series range with strong software support, which keeps parts reasonably available. See our Pixel repair cost hub.
- Motorola. Motorola's strength is the budget-to-mid range, where its parts economics compete directly with Redmi. See our Motorola repair cost hub.
The pattern: Redmi and Poco deliver some of the best repair value in the UK Android market because their parts are standardised and plentiful, while Xiaomi flagships and Mix foldables cost more for the same reasons every premium device does. The cross-brand overview is on our Android screen replacement cost hub.
Repair, replace, or claim on insurance?
On the Redmi and Poco end the answer is almost always “repair”. A Redmi Note screen or battery at the figures published above is a fraction of a replacement handset, and the 27-month guarantee returns the phone to full everyday and resale value for more than two years — more than double the 12 months most independent UK repairers offer. Even on a Xiaomi flagship, a screen or battery replacement typically beats buying new once you weigh the part cost against the price of a comparable device.
Insurance with accidental-damage cover is an alternative, but weigh the excess, the effect on next year's premium, and the fact that many insurers fit aftermarket panels rather than OEM-grade — our repair vs insurance claim comparison sets out the trade-offs. The one genuine exception is a handset with a separate board or liquid fault alongside the visible damage. There the maths changes, and we will diagnose it free and tell you plainly if it has crossed the beyond-economical-repair line before you commit. If the only question is whether a cracked-but-working screen needs urgent attention, our fix now or wait guide helps you decide the timing.
Which Xiaomi do you have? Telling Xiaomi, Redmi and Poco apart
Xiaomi sells under three sub-brands and pricing tracks them, so knowing which one you hold is the first step to the right figure. The flagship Xiaomi line — the numbered Xiaomi series — carries the dearest OLED panels and cameras. The Redmi line is the volume mid-range, with the deepest parts pool of the three and therefore the most affordable screens and batteries. Poco sits as the performance-value tier, sharing panel grades with Redmi but often in a different chassis. The tell is the badge on the rear and the branding at boot: a handset badged Redmi or Poco is priced on those lines, not the flagship Xiaomi tariff, even when it shares a model-number stem with one.
It matters because the names collide. A "14 Pro" can be a flagship Xiaomi 14 Pro or a budget-tier Redmi Note 14 Pro, and their screens are not the same part or the same price — exactly the kind of collision that makes a category-aware lookup essential rather than a guess from the number alone. If you are unsure, send the exact model from the Settings screen or the original box and we match it to the right sub-brand on the bench before quoting, so you get the Redmi price on a Redmi and the Xiaomi price on a Xiaomi, never the other way round.
One point worth stating plainly: across every sub-brand, celltech publishes a single fixed price per model and repairs by tracked post UK-wide, so the figure you see is the figure you pay — wherever in the country you are, and whichever Xiaomi-family handset you own.
Frequently asked questions
How much does a Xiaomi screen replacement cost in the UK?
It depends on the sub-brand and model. Xiaomi flagship screens run £199.95–£349.95, Redmi Note screens £89.95–£149.95, Poco screens £129.95–£189.95, and budget Redmi A/C models from around £49.95. Every figure is published in the tables above — no quote form.
Do you repair Redmi and Poco phones as well as Xiaomi?
Yes — all three sub-brands are within scope under one price list. Redmi (the volume value line) and Poco (the performance-for-price line) are actually the most common Xiaomi-family handsets we see in the UK.
Why is a Xiaomi flagship screen more expensive than a Redmi?
The flagship uses a larger, higher-spec AMOLED panel that costs more and is scarcer; the Redmi line uses simpler panels (often LCD on the budget models), so the parts cost — and therefore the price — is lower.
Can you repair a Xiaomi Mix Fold or Mix Flip?
Yes. The Mix Fold 4 / Fold 3 and Mix Flip flexible inner displays are specialist work we take on, with the inner screen priced per generation (from £399.95 to £549.95).
How long is the repair guarantee?
Screens, batteries, cameras and back glass carry 27 months — more than double the 12 months most independent UK repairers offer. Charging-port and connector repairs carry the 9-month connector tier; board-level and liquid-damage work carries 120 days.
Can I send my Xiaomi for repair by post from anywhere in the UK?
Yes. Book online, post it tracked and insured via Royal Mail Special Delivery, and we return it the same way once repaired. You do not need to live anywhere near our workshop.